Thursday, October 29, 2015

I used up all my words today writing my EA piece rather late.* So just gonna do an excerpt here and one or two other comments.

"A picture of an old
election ballot surfaced on social media as I sat nervously
monitoring media for the results, back from the days when voting in
Tanzania mean that you either said 'yes' to Nyerere or you said 'no'
to Nyerere. Aside from being beautiful, it was a great reminder of
just where we began with this democracy and sovereignty business. It
took some time for Mwalimu to concede the leadership to a successor,
it took a while longer for the state to accept multi-party democracy,
it has taken us 20 years to get to a point where the opposition
presented a sustained and credible challenge to the ruling party- at
least on the mainland."

We have a President-elect and Zanzibar is looking very... um. Hmmm.**

Okay, it has been a long week (by which I mean three months) so ama just go do anything but politics for as long as I can stand it. But before I go, let me leave you with this one thought: has there ever been a Tanzanian President without facial hair? hmmm? has there? #tafakari.

*so. late. so many feels. so tired.

**Zanzibar: I do not feel qualified to talk about Zanzibar, ever. If anyone tells you they can talk about Zanzibar and they are not Zanzibari? Don't buy into that. All I can say is: don't take your eye off Zanzibar for now.

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

Day 456*: If this election has a theme, it is that nobody is a loser. Several CCM cadres have implied they were treated unfairly having lost their constituencies, which is delightful because usually only opposition plays the 'unfair treatment' card. Opposition in Zanzibar declared itself the winners of the election well ahead of results being announced and UKAWA has stated bluntly that it will not accept the outcomes of this elections if their Presidential candidate loses.

After ZEC declared the elections null and void in Zanzibar today, things got interesting. The primary concern of course was: what does this mean for the Mainland elections? The short answer was provided by Judge Lubuva fairly quickly: nothing. He read through a list of about 5 or six reasons why this was the case, then plunged right back into the duty of reading out the election results received so far.

Here's a delicious complication: CUF is unhappy with what the ZEC decision which they claim was made by Jecha without the consent of his fellow Commissioners. While on the Mainland, UKAWA would like the Mainland elections to be declared null and void by NEC. CUF on the mainland is a part of UKAWA but on the isles is standing on its own with Chadema (I guess) being the UKAWA flagbearer there. So... major opposition in the Isles needs the opposite of what major opposition needs on the mainland even though they are, um, allies?

And people say politics are boring.

Why isn't there considerably more conflict happening, all things considered? Well, the message from all the leaders irrespective of party (yes, even Lowassa and I admit surprise) has been the same: chill. They seem to be directing their advice specifically to the volatile youth. But that pretty much sums up the general feeling that it is not worth disrupting the peace over this. We actually use the word 'love' non-ironically in our nationalistic rhetoric. Also, there's a lot of security out there and nobody has time for remand :)

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

So day two of vote counting is limping along. In light of accusations of bias towards the ruling party, NEC head Justice Lubuva has been forced to explain (repeatedly) that the vote announcement process is slow because they are following procedure and only releasing those results that have been verified from voting stations. And it will take as long as it takes.

Which hits home since Kawe results were delayed and only announced in the late afternoon. A number of places have experienced delays as well and had to announce a bit later than expected. For the most part the hold-ups are due to recounts and other delays. In other places the incidents are a bit more...creative: in Kunduchi a candidate was arrested for eating the election results before they could be announced. Yes, you read that right.

At this point in time it is fairly clear that Broadcast (preferably live) is the best information source. Too much jiggery-pokery going on in social media, and Print is limited by its format. Like right now I am watching UKAWA leadership announce that they do not accept the results as presented by NEC. And accusing NEC of being tampered with, the security forces of being complicit in making sure that their Presidential candidate does not win all under the aegis of the ruling party. They also want the people arrested when their data camps were raided soon after the voting ended to be released.

So that story's developing.

And so is Zanzibar. I am a little too tired to even try to delve into that so just read this BBCAfrica post and we'll pick up the conversation tomorrow.

Monday, October 26, 2015

As I type I am watching Justice Lubuva remind the public that the NEC are the only source of official election results. He is literally waving signed papers at the camera to prove that they aren't "fake." Unfortunately, NEC and ZEC are not doing themselves any favors what with the delays.

With every six hours that pass, tensions are heightened. As of last night people have been asking for official announcements of the results at the polling stations and from NEC and ZEC for confirmation. Because let's just say that more than one institution/party/community/individual is "absolutely certain" of what the results are (or should be?).

We're watching a public institution fight a difficult battle over legitimacy of results with the media, with parties, with a whole host of actors some of which are shady for sure. And at the pace at which Judge Lubuva is reading... people, I can't even comprehend how in 2015 we're still down to one old man reading out from a spreadsheet. Maybe it could be multiple old men? I dunno, something. Time, time is of essence.

Noted: the majority of the reporting so far (and I am going by AzamTV's numbers) reflect areas where CCM is winning. But the ratios are really low, we are very far from a complete picture at the council level. At the Presidential level similar kind of story. Meanwhile there have been a lot of non-NEC declarations and statements at press conferences. Which all adds up to: what's actually taking so long and why does this look like bias?

Also noted: Every so often someone will spare the time to scrutinize the international press' coverage and address any areas of concern, as one @joetrippi learned today. This is feeding into a very interesting and perhaps overdue dialogue about narratives both local and international- who, what did they say, how did they say it, why? The local argument we've been having for months. The international one though is new and I suspect has caught a few by surprise. Upole si udhaifu...

N'kay. Going back to watching footage of trouble spots to get a general sense of the security forces...um...force? Not all the 'peace and stability' in Tanzania is a spontaneous manifestation of good character. There is a social contract at play here, and I want to see how both sides are holding up.

Friday, October 23, 2015

This is the last piece for The East African before my sweet darling country goes to the polls. I am posting it in its entirety here just in case The East African has any notions of editing the verve out of it, especially the part where I would like to take a verbal flamethrower to "journos" who can only comprehend Tanzania through the inappropriate of, uh, lens? of Kenya*:

"Excepting the early birds who know well
enough to look online of a Saturday morning, by the time you read
this article Tanzania will be deep in the contractions of rebirthing
herself as she does every ten years. Like any kind of labour it's
going to take a while and we all hope everything goes well, so take a
magazine and make yourself comfortable for the next foreseeable.
Might be a week or two before the dust settles.

Meanwhile? Party time. There is nothing
like the anticipation of a bit of change to put a little pep in the
step. Also, sweet freedom beckons. No longer will we have to look
into the earnest faces of people reading off a teleprompter exhorting
us to vote for them or their patron. It has taken all the strength
and patience in the world not to spray windex on every screen in my
vicinity and frantically scrape off the politics. The shrill flatness
of bad speech delivery is also going to disappear as a feature of
daily life, and perhaps we might rediscover colors without fear of
unwittingly expressing political opinions.

Conversations will broaden again. Radio
stations will no longer have to play nationalistic songs ad nauseum.
There might be some small sensibility reintroduced to the policy
aspects of public life. Advertisements might become entertaining
again. And beautiful people with great enunciation reading the news
off tablet computers might actually have something to say.

Of course it won't all come correct
within the first few days. CCM and Chadema have upped the ante so
much that they have left us no choice but to be cranky immediately
after the elections. As I write this, Tanzanians are being stripped
of their right to assemble and told that they can't gather together
closer than 200 meters from a voting station.

This is excellent pre-emptive
peacekeeping. It is also surprisingly dumb, unnecessarily stoking the
fires of doubt and agitation. There's a reason people like to “guard
their vote” and it would have been politic, CCM, to let people
enjoy a false sense of security by allowing them to do so, amirite?
As it is, there's some serious lady-hating happening. The
Establishment is saying that women are likely to be prevented from
voting because of threats of violence, blah blah blah. We are still
going to vote, by the way, and who in their right mind threatens an
African woman like so. I would look up an approprite Nigerian curse
for this abomination, but who has the time.

What's that? Ah, the candidates, you
ask. Sure. The real five-year prize is the legislature. A reasonable
balance in the law-making institution is what we actually need if any
of the campaign promises made so far have a chance at coming to
fruition. Yes, zealots have been working hard to make us believe that
the man makes the nation, but truth be told the issue is much deeper
than two middle-aged Establishment veterans with questionable oratory
skills.

If they were half the “warriors”
they claim to be, we could all have settled this by letting their
mutual former boss Mzee Ali Hassan Mwinyi challenge both men to a 5K
walk. Whoever can talk/do pushups/explain education policy with
coherence after that ordeal might be deserving of a disinterested
shrug in their direction. Fine: we could throw in an overpriced
bottle of water into that scenario, since you insist. That, folks,
would have been the gentlemanly way to resolve a dispute nobody asked
y'all to drag us taxpaying voters into in the first place.

To pass the time between the voting,
the results, the anger at the results, the re-count, the intermittent
incidences of bajaj-related skirmishes, execrable international press
coverage et cetera I treated myself to a month-long supply of local
TV stations. Mostly because I just want to hang out with my man Tido
Mhando and a couple of other brilliant homegrown journalists. This
election? Ha. Like any kind of labour it's going to take a while and
we all hope everything goes well, so pick a good channel and make
yourself comfortable for the next foreseeable. Might be a week or two
before the dust settles.

Saturday, October 17, 2015

Yes, yes: I wasn't going to do any election coverage this year. But this week my street is absolutely plastered with election paraphenalia and it is to weird not to share. I observed the madness in Arusha a couple of months ago with considerable smugness, never expecting that Dar might succumb to such provincial declarations of love. How wrong was I?

Some snapshots: spotted one dude down the shop strip who usually comes across as eminently reasonable, riding his bike with a party flag awkwardly attached to the handlebar. To which the only response is: good luck with the aerodynamics on that, buddy. And then some wazee taxi drivers at the stand, awkwardly wearing brand new hats they had obviously been given for purpose? Ha! It is always amusing to see a grown man self-humiliate by wearing silly things. Don't even get me started on the arms race between Chadema and CCM flags. Incontrovertible proof that size does matter, and if she tells you otherwise she really, really loves you.

I have been hate-reading* all non-Tanzanian coverage of these elections to see if it matches up with how things feel here. It basically doesn't. Nobody writes articles about how pleasant it is to spend five minutes or more cordially disagreeing with the butcher/duka guy/hair stylist.

Nobody writes about the work it takes to keep a lid on the provocateurs, or that being 'chill' is actually a political tool not a sign of ignorance or idiocy. Want to neutralize a nuisance looking for a fight? Ignore them. If they insist, either employ humor or just play stupid. Oh, and nobody writes what they really think (know). I mean what they really, really think (know), except for a few notable agitators here and there, because why bother when so many "communications consultants" are being paid to subvert whatever truths may emerge?

The reality on the ground is simultaneously more complex and less dramatic than any media operative would wish for. Frankly, 99.9% of daily life is precisely as boring as it should be. Annoying construction noises, birthday parties, traffic jams, morally-ambiguous bosses, overpriced petrol, stray cats, screaming babies, movie nights, gossip, cable guys who just don't show up, upcountry trips, cattle, Nokia Torch (lights up your third-world!), quiet dinners, laundry days, family arguments.

With a week to go to the most hotly contested election in Tanzania so far, it makes opportunistic sense to report that things are tense and terrible and exciting. Underneath the fanfare, though, you'll mostly find a bunch of people with a penchant for excellent tailoring trying to get a good deal on a piece of fresh fish or a public hall for a wedding party. Welcome to Tanzania.

*Extreme prejudice. I am reading TZ "coverage" and I am totally judging you, international press. And there's almost nothing you can do to measure up. Yes, Kenya, this includes you. BTW, can somebody please help CNN find the Google button? There is every danger that they might label Tanzania wrong (again).